rOBTUXD. OREGON. "Entered at Portland, Oregon. Postofnca as raoad-clua matter. Subscription Kates Invariably In Advance: CBT MAIL) plly, Sunday Included, one year $8.00 liiy. Sunday Included, ilx month.,., 4.25 I'aily, Sunday Included, three months.. 2.25 Pally, Sunday Included, one month 7S Ually, without SuixJay, one year 6.00 Dally, without Sunday, nix months 3.25 iJally, without Sunday, three months... 1.7S lally, without Sunday, one month..... .60 Weekly, one year 1.60 tun day. one year 2.50 Sunday and Weekly, one year 1.69 (BT CARRIER) Dally, Sunday Included, one year "0 Ually. Sunday Included, one month 75 liow to Kemlt Send postofttce money or der, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currenoy are at nder's risk. Give postoffice address In lull. Including county and state. i'ostage Kates 12 to 1 pages. 1 cent: 1 to 32 pages, 2 cents; 14 to 43 pages. 1 cents; to to i;u pages, 4 cents; 62 to 711 pages, 5 cants; 78 to Hi! pages, t cents. Foreign post age, double rates. Kastern Runines Offices Verree & Conk lln. New York. Brunswick building. Chi cago, Steger building. ban Frant-Uro Office R. J. Bldwell Co, 4' Market street. European Office Xo. g Regent street 3. W ., London. WBTLA.VD, BUNT) AT. JTJIS'K 89, 191. TUB COXCEXTKATION AT GETTYSBURG. Indecision threatened to paralyze the Federal arm -when it was finally learned that Lee had crossed the Po tomac and was moving upon Pennsyl vania. Evidently the capital was In danger and the timorous Halleck made Its defense his foremost object. Hook er, who still commanded the Army of the Potomac, wished to strike Lee's array In the rear, but he was with held. Lincoln advised an attack some where about the middle of Lee's long extended line of march, but this coun sel was also neglected. At length It was resolved to act strictly upon the defensive. Hooker was permitted to cross the Potomac, but he was enjoined to do nothing except watch Lee's movements and keep between him and Washington. The truth of the matter was that the authorities had no con fidence in Hooker since his fiasco at Chancellorsville. His later move ments had restored the respect of his men but not of his superiors and it bad secretly been decided to supersede him before an engagement came on. This plan was made, all the more agreeable to Halleck by Hooker's re peated requests to evacuate Harper's Ferry. He said the troops-there were useless and- no doubt they were, but Halleck resented his Importunity and kept them shut up In the fortress, perhaps as much to spite his subordin ate as for any other reason. Hooker began crossing the Potomac at Edward's Ferry, some thirty" miles northwest of Washington, on June 26. By the 26th his entire force iwas on the Maryland side and he then moved northward to Frederick. Here on June 2 7 he received word that he had been superseded by Meade, who was him self notified of his appointment on the afternoon of the next day, which was Sunday. Meade's first act was to es tablish a defensive line along Pipe Creek between Mlddleburg and Man chester. From this advantageous situa tion he would have been able to take Lee in the flank had fortune led the Confederates to msve either upon Washington or Baltimore. Meade's conduct from this time to the last day at Gettysburg was marked by calm and Judicial wisdom. On June 2C, when Hooker began crossing- the Po tomac, Lee was already at Chambers burg, Pennsylvania, where he had set up his temporary headquarters. His two able subordinates, Hlil and Long street, with their troops were Just en tering Maryland from the Shenandoah Valley on the northward march. His tried and victorious cavalry was In three divisions. Imboden iwas at Mc Connellsburg to guard the rear, while two divisions had been sent out east ward to clear the way to the Susque hanna. Ewell had gone to the north and was now at Carlisle, threatening Harrisburg. The invincible Early was moving almost directly east from Chambersburg toward York, which he soon seized. It was through one of his cavalry commanders that Lee suffered an ex perience of those mistakes and bad calculations which so often attend a great offensive movement. As long as he -was acting on the defensive In Vir ginia everything turned out exactly as he had planned. His subordinates obeyed their orders precisely and his army was plast.c to his will. But now he had taken the aggressive and it was necessary that his generals, marching through a strange territory, should exercise some initiative of their own. This naturally caused divided counsels. The famous cavalry com mander, J. E. B. Stuart, had been or dered to cross the Potomac wherever he could and march north-ward, guard ing Lee's right wing. He crossed at Rotifer's Ford, fifteen miles west of Washington, and from that moment until the afternoon of July 1 he was ont of touch with the rest of of the Confederate army. He fell in with Kllpatrick's Union cavalry at Hanover on June 30 and fought indecisively. He then continued northward and reached Carlisle on the afternoon of July 1, too late to be of service in the first day's fighting. Lee had depended on Stuart to keep him Informed of Hooker's movements. . The consequence of Stuart's aimless wanderings was that he knew nothing of the Federal ad vance until the night of June 28. Late on that night a Confederate soout named Harrison entered his camp at Chambersburg and told him that the enemy was at Frederick with. Meade for a commander In place of Hooker. Lee was eager to meet and crush the Union Army, which he had learned thoroughly to despise. He and his men made the mistake of Judging the quality of the Federal troops by the Incompetents wbo had led them. No better corps commander ever entered a campaign than Hooker had under him at Chancellorsville and no braver sol diers ever died than those whose lives were wasted in that wicked slaughter. Not knowing this Lee expected anoth er easy victory, but for all that he chose his position at Cashtown, a little west of Gettysburg, with admirable discretion. The rear was guarded by mountains, while In the faint contin gency of defeat he had an open road through to Chambersburg and thence southward. As soon as he learned of Meade's whereabouts orders went out to his scattered divisions to concen trate at Cashtown and by June 30 Ewell, Early and Imboden were ad vancing upon tha point. Hill and Longstreet were already there. Meade was now also moving toward Gettys burg which, since It lay at the head of the Monocacy Valley, was a natural center of military movements. On the night of June 30 his headquarters were at Taneytown and Oeneral Reyn olds, in command of his left wing, lay only six miles from Gettysburg. His right wing iwas guarded by Gregg's cavalry. Kllpatrick was scouting? in advance where, as we have seen, he fell in with Stuart on June 30. Buford was assigned to cover the left. His route lay from Middletown through Hagerstown to a point about eight miles south of Lee's main body at Cashtown. Here Buford camped on the night of June 29. The next morn ing he moved on toward Gettysburg, avoiding Lee's outposts, and joined forces with Reynolds, who had orders to occupy that place. Buford there fore advanced toward Gettysburg by the Emmltsburg road and reached the village early In the afternoon of June 30, Just in time to encounter Pettl grew's North. Carolina brigade which was scouting for shoes. Lee's soldiers being barefoot in -many instances. The Confederates retired toward Cash town -without showing fight and Bu ford was left in possession of the town. All iwas now quiet until the morning of July 1. TAINTED OPrSIONS. "Practically everybody In the state," says the Portland Journal, "has con cluded that the West honor) system Is good. The late Legislature so de cided. ... A legislative investi gating committee, after a searching In vestigation, so decided." Here is news that will surprise everyone interested in Governor West's extraordinary sys tem of turning loose upon the public convicts who happen to enjoy the ex ecutive favor. Yet It need hardly sur prise any one who knows about the service rendered to the Governor by the Portland newspaper in seeking to interpret all the Governor's whimsical and boyish, acts in the light of sound and sane action and his most foolish policies as the product of a profound and experienced statesmanship. Tire Oregonian is able to find no rec ord of indorsement by the recent Leg islature of the honor system. A legis lative committee Investigated the state penitentiary and was unable to agree In Its recommendations. The major ity Senators Ragsdale and Hollis and Representative Laughlin approved the penitentiary management, and commended the parole system; but from beginning to end of its report there is not a word about the honor system. The minority was opposed to the whole business, we believe. The minority report reached the Legislature before the majority report, was read and filed, and the fact that It made no mention of the honor sys tem Was the svibject of comment. With this public notice that the subject was in the mind of the legislators the ma jority report, also silent as to the hon or system, was submitted nine days later. The parole system, it should be ex plained, is one thing; the so-called "honor" system the special creation of a Governor passionately determined to use his great power to the limit is quite another. The distinction was made clear, recently by the Governor himself, in a public statement. This legislative report is printed in full in the Portland Daily Journal, Saturday, February 22, 1913, follow ing a series of tainted news dispatches from Salem designed to show that the committee would report in favor of the honor system. The committee did nothing ef the kind; yet the Journal is not at all discouraged, nor deterred from saying that It did. The whole matter Is Important only in so far as it has been unscrupulously used to misrepresent the attitude of the State Legislature about the "hon or" system of Governor West. KHLATIQXS I" THE GREAT POWERS. Those who are inclined to Join Sec retary Bryan inr chasing the rainbow ef universal peace founded on inter national arbitration should study carefully "Problems of Power," by William Morton Fullerton. This au thor, through long residence in Paris as correspondent of the London Times, has become intimately ac quainted with the mutual relations of the great powers of the world. He discusses all the circumstances bear ing on those relations with a clear comprehension of the moving forces. He knows too well the rivalries, jeal ousies, aspirations and ideals of the great powers- to harbor the delusions of these who hope that in their own lifetime there shall be no more war. Yet he is no jingo. His judgment is based on what he knows to be the fadts and he refuses to allow yearning for peace to warp that Judgment. Mr. Fullerton traces back to Bis marck the causes leading to the pres ent grouping- of European powers. He condemns the annexation of Alsace and Lorraine as a fatal blunder from the German standpoint, which, brought France and Russia into- alliance after the German-Austrian alliance was formed in 1879, to -be joined three years later try Italy. Russia Intended the alliance to be defensive only, but France, still suffering from the wounds Inflicted in 1870, looked to her ally to aid her in securing re venge. Her eyes were opened by the Czar's proposal of the first Hague peace conference. Germany pursued her ambition to be the dominant power of Europe by instigating France to engage in colonial adven tures which would bring that power into collision with England and Italy. The Kaiser is accused of en couraging the Czar in his Manchurian adventure and of taking advantage of this preoccupation to become the prac tical protector of Turkey, while her Austrian ally gained preponderant in fluence in the Balkan states. But German recognition that her future was on the sea, the building of the German navy and the expansion of German foreign trade brought that nation into rivalry with England, and Dfflcasse as early as 1898 began working towards the Anglo-French understanding toy settling then-existing disputes. The Boer war and the Kaiser's telegram to Kruger opened England's eyes to the perils of a pol icy of Isolation. Both France and England recognized that Germany en Joyed the prospect of a fight between them. They decided not. to fight and in 1904 became allies. Germany was stunned by this, con sequence of her policy and clumsily schemed to pry apart the newly bound friends, but each move caused them to cling closer together. The disastrous culmination of Russia's Manchurian adventure and the reve lation ef her military weakness caused France to rely more on England; the growing hostility of Germany and the upbuilding of the German navy in creased British reliance on French aid. Each labored to enhance the power and influence of the other. The climax of this situation was the sending of a German gunboat to Agadir in 1911. Germany and France had 'been haggling for a year and a half over the carrying out of the Al geciras agreement, Germany's aim be ing to break up the Anglo-French agreement. Failing In this, says Mr. Fullerton, "she revived her other more familiar policy, the policy of intimi dation." She chose a time when each of her foes was absorbed In internal troubles and when she believed Great Britain was "incurably pacific." But both allies immediately showed their claws. British statesmen gave the world clearly to understand that they would stand shoulder to shoulder iwlth France, and the Agadir Incident ended In the most stinging rebuff to Ger many. Europe is thus divided into two camps, each aiming to prevent the other from gaining preponderance. But there are evidences of increasing friendship between individual mem bers of opposite groups and of fric tion between members of the same group. Italy's growth as a naval power in the Mediterranean is not un welcome to England and France, but her Trlpolitan war has created tension with Austria. The latter nation and Italy have gained most by the triple alliance, Germany nothing. The set tlement growing out of the Balkan war has brought England more into harmony with Austria and Germany through her having supported the de mand for an autonomous Albania. Germany and England have come to gether on the construction of the Bag dad railway and its extension to tho Persian Gulf under Joint ownership of British and German capital. This strengthening of German influence in Asia Minor, where Russia hopes for aggrandizement, can hardly be pleas ing to the latter empire. Thus the two groups are each bound together for certain purposes, but their mem bers are each pursuing other and con flicting purposes. These may in time work out a new grouping. PEOPLE'S CONTRACT. IS SACRED. There is more or less analogy be tween the attempt to deprive water front owners of their title to sub merged lands fronting their property and the effort of a small element to abrogate the East Side franchises of the Harriman railroads. Tears ago the state gave away or as some contend, merely failed to take to itself river lands that have since become 1 ly valuable. The city granted some years ago to tne railroads rights on streets, and these rights naturally Increased in value in proportion to the growth of the city in population and as a mar ket and distributive center. It was proposed that the private rights and titles on the -water front built up on faith in the state's fair dealing should be destroyed by the courts. It was proposed in the other" case that the people destroy what had become an asset to the railroads In Is suance of bonds and what in large measure had induced them to expend many. thousands of dollars in the city. The chief motive for each was the ac quirement of an advantage fer the public, regardless of its effect on pri vate property. It is of recent history that the peo ple of Portland are not disposed for mere pecuniary advantage to welch on their contracts. The voters believe in fair play. If their servants in office have shown lack of foresight in other years, the people are not disposed to retrieve that error now if by so doing the integrity of the city and private interests thereon erected should fall. The vote against repeal of the railroad franchises, although profitable exac tions from the railroads were possible by abrogating the railroad privileges, was emphatio and decisive. We fancy that the public looks upon the decision, of the Supreme Court in the waterfront case in the same light-. The people as a whole are honest at heart. They believe in upholding con tracts, specific or Implied, regardless of what they can gain by repudiating them. It would be a very nice thing for the city if it could now get back what the state permitted river-bank owners to take when waterfront was a burden to him who had to pay taxes on it. And taxes were paid on it. The definite character of the grant to shore owners- was recognized for years by public officials collecting revenue therefrom. It would, indeed, Se profit able, we say, to keep the tax money and take back the land on which it was paid. But we doubt that the peo ple would do it were it possible to re call the court's decision and submit the ruling to popular vote. TWO WAYS OF DOING IT. If America gave immediate inde pendence for the Philippines what sort of self-government would the Moros establish? If the islands were under a central government, what probability is there that these savages would be brought into submission and compelled to respect the rights of those white men whom they religiously, hate? The test of ability to maintain Inde pendence Is ability to maintain order. Without internal peace, some foreign nation would continually find a pre text for aggression in wrong done one of its citizens. If we guard the is lands against aggression by assuming a protectorate, we make ourselves re sponsible for Internal order, but if we grant independence we deprive ourselves of the power to preserve or der. But we are the more likely to be called upon to intervene when we lack this power. Cuba is far more advanced In civilization and orderly government than would be the Philippines, if in dependent, yet we have already found intervention necessary in that island. How much of tener should we be com pelled to intervene in an archipelago of several tribes, languages and relig ions and at various stages of progress between the wild Igorrotes and the cultured Tagalogs? . The Taft policy in the Philippines is working towards independence by. fitting the people to enjoy it. By d ucatlng the people, developing the country, facilitating intercourse, giv ing them a common language and ideals and giving them from time to time a larger measure of control over their own affairs, that policy is train ing up the Filipinos for independent nationhood as a father trains up his son for Independent manhood- When this training is complete, a protecto rate will be unnecessary for the young nation will be able to stand on its own feet, responsible to the world for order within its own territory. It will need no outside safeguards other than such a. guaranty of neutrality as Eu rope has given Belgium. The question is not iwhether the Philippines shall become independent. We are all agreed on that. It is whether they shall toe hurried Into In dependence before they are capable of self-government. Republican pol icy would wait until they have completed- at least the grammar-school course; Democratic policy would turn them out into the world of nations when they have just entered the sec ond errade. A gleam of common sense has en tered the intellect of the New York Court of Appeals. It has upheld a law which requires any person who has reason to believe he has injured person or property by the operation of ; an automobile to stop and give his name and address. Not to do so is made a felony. The lower court sustained a demurrer on the ground that this law Infringed on a person's constitutional right to refuse to testify against him self, but the appeal court held that an automobile owner may be required to waive his constitutional privilege as "a condition of operating such a machine." UVDEXT 1IOPF.FTJL. PORTLAND, June 26. (To the Editor.) Tou are getting quite sane when you come out and say that the land shark has been handing "gold bricks-' to men that wanted homes. No, you cannot kill oft the land speculator by calling him a. "land shark" or a "gold brick artist." That sounds good and shows that you have thought some thoughts, but you have a think or two a coming, and may your lucid moments con tinue until you see the light in all Its beauty. I have been trying to convince The Ore gonian for lo. these many years, that the land speculator was the worst enemy the children of men have to fight, and now you have come out and asked the- bankers "to dog his footsteps and foil hla every sin ister move," and that leads me to hope that you may come out and ask that the tax law be changed so it will favor him who works, and discourage the land speculator, who shirks. It always looks good to see a light in a dark place, and I have heard that there is much rejoicing In heaven over the .return of one sinner, and it makes me optimistic to see The Oregonian come out and com mend a U'Ren measure In one issue and then take up its hammer in the next issue and go to knocking the land speculator like a good Christian slrould. H. r. .WAGNON. We had expected, now that the sea son for office seeking is closed, that Brother Wagnon would have time again to aeroplane to flights of fancy. We can only point eut to our befuddled friend that when one recognizes the existence of an undesirable condition, it does not follow that one indorses any or every fantastic theory as to how that condition may be changed. Tho Oregonian believes that when It expresses regret concerning high realty values most of its readers are too In telligent to infer that it is about to tread in the footsteps of Henry George, Joseph Fels et aL If all its readers were like Mr. Wag non It iwould be unsafe, incidentally, to mention the ravages of consumption, for fear the Impression would gain ground that All sufferers were thereby recommended to try Indian cantations or turtle serum, or whatever "cure" happened to be most vociferously ad vertised at that precise moment. THE POETRY OF THE FUTCRE. Edmund Gosse, the well-known critic, is in despair for the future of poetry. Others have been In the same mood ever since poetry began to be written. There have always been Jere miahs who lamented that all words had been worn to rags, all the fine thoughts expressed, all the beautiful emotions exploited until they were nauseous. But life has usually-proved itself more potent than pessimism and each gasp of despair over poetry and the other arts has been followed by an outburst of new and unexpected genius. Mr. Gosse is a little more me thodical in his madness than some of his predecessors, but that is the only way he differs from them. People read so much, he says, that "the possi bilities of freshness grow rarer and rarer. The obvious, "simple, poignant things seem all to have been said." The critic permits himself this de spondent swoop of fancy because he knows little or nothing of the world he lives in- It is perfectly true that all the simple and poignant things have been said about swords Major-Generals and nightingales. It would take a dozerr Shakespeares boiled down into one to say anything fresh about vio lets, the moon or Angelina's eyes. So much must be admitted. But it is not by any means true that all the simple and poignant things have been said about the motorcycle, the flying machine and the player piano. Nobody has written any odes to the farm motor or sung any hymns to the moving pictures. We are aware that all our songsters will shudder at the thought of these horrible contriv ances, but. they will constitute the ma terial of the poetry of the future. The poets of olden time dealt with the ob jects which made up their world, fear ing none and hating none. They sung of iwar steeds and resounding trumpets because these things were the major factors in deciding the fate of their contemporaries. But neither trumpets nor steeds decide the fate of the mod ern world. It depends on steam, elec tricity and the expansive power of gasoline. When a poet is born who has eyes to see the power and beauty of these factors in our civilization, we shall have poetry as great and vital as there ever was. Milton was wrong in thinking that a poet could be "born an age too late." There are no late ages. Every one is early. It is al ways morning in the eternities. The fault is not with the age, but with the vision of the poet. Having eyes, he sees not. Having ears, he hears not. But wait a little and somebody will appear who has both eyes and ears and then the Muses wfll pipe up. The weak and flaccid stuff which passes for poetry with us has ho vigor because of our false standards. While we live in an age of science and me chanics, our literature still clings to the gods, fables and concepts of classi cism. Stephen Phillips, for instance, who has a real gift of expression, wastes it on the outworn themes of olden story. The poor man can find nothing worth singing about in his own magnificent age. He has to go back and poke around in the puddles of clas sical and medieval lore. How could he expect anybody to read him except wan pedants who suffered with the same disease as himself? It Is a nota ble fact that of the thirteen most pop ular novelists of last year six women and five men never went to college. Their minds remained in touch with their generation because they had not been sterilized and isolated by the clas sical Infection. Edmund Gosse continues his wail by saying that the poet of the future must be isolated. He will take refuge in "symbolic subtlety." He will "wrap the truh in darkness." "The closing up of the poetic field will isolate the poet from his felhyws." Poets will "band themselves together" Into a sort of monastic guild for "mutual protec tion" against the rude world. This is far from the mark. Poets will do nothing of the sort. As soon as the genuine impulse to sing arises they will hie them out into the storm and stress of life. They will learn all about steam, electricity and gasoline. They will pen odes to the automobile and paeans to the talking machine. The wireless telegraph will excite their awe and . wonder as grandly as Zeus and Prometheus did the Greeks. Elec tricity does greater marvels than Zeus ever dreamed of, and no Greek myth begins to emulate the splendid tri umphs cf the flying machine. Our poets are blind and deaf. They shrink from their world with a feeble shudder which iwould have made Homer burst with scorn. The "sissyish" education we give our youths accounts in great part for their inability to sing. We feed their minds on delicate tidbits cut from dead literatures and expect this nutriment to vitalize their genius. It never will. When great poetry is written by geniuses there are always "vulgar" song3 going about among the people. The highest art Is uniformly rooted in popular feeling and the people's long ing for self-expression. Our painting and music are as feebly pedantic as our poetry because neither of them ever touches the earth. They try to keep up their strength by nibbling at dead men's bones when what they really need is living flesh and blood. When Leonardo and Titian were painting there was an artisan in every shop who loved his work as much as they loved theirs. The genius which could fresco the Sistine Chapel grew out of the humble devotion that carved chair legs and molded doorways In peasants cottages. Our art Is thin and valetudinarian because it is starv ing. Feed it on the diet of life and it will grow robust. But we must stop spoiling our young poets' diges tions with food from the tombs be fore we ought to expect inspired song from them. AXOTHER ART TREASURE. We have no artist who can paint like Rembrandt, but we have what Is a good deal better, millionaires who can outbid every competitor when his pictures are put up at auction. As long as we can buy Rembrandts and Ra phaels, why under the shining sun should we take the trouble to paint them ourselves, even if we could do it? The famous Oriental potentate who employed a robust soldier to be come the father of his children is a case in point. The perfection of opu lent ease is to purchase everything and do nothing whatever for oneself. The occasion of these sage reflections is the recent capture at a Paris auction of a Rembrandt and a Romney, at London, toy a pair of our art-loving financial magnates. "The most re markable thing about the Rembrandt," we are told in the report of the affair, 'Is that It was never before supposed to be worth more than $1500." But now its price has leaped to $200,000 while the Romney brought a little more. So we must conclude that Rom ney was a greater painter than Rem brandt. It is added in the account, perhaps satirically, that the importa tion of these old pictures and the prices paid for them, especially the prices, show that "American art is in a flourishing condition." The unlearned might naturally sup, pose that American art would be flour ishing when American painters could obtain prices like $200,000 for their own pictures, but that is a grave error, Art flourishes when dead painters are buried in gold and living painters starve in garrets. But in spite of these indisputable truths we venture to believe that the price of this Rem brandt is not "the most remarkable thing" about it. In our modest opin ion it is far more remarkable for the genius of the man who painted it and the story it Illustrates than for the money it brought at auction. The sub ject is the capture of Uriah's wife, Bathsheba, by King David. The amor ous monarch treacherously "set Uriah in the forefront of the hottest battle" and ordered everybody to "retire from him so that he may be smitten and die." When this was accomplished David "sent and brought the woman to his house and she became his wife and bare him a son," no less a son than Solomon, in fact. David first saw Bathsheba when she "was wash ing herself" and the Rembrandt com memorates that interesting occasion. BATTLE ON CURRENCY BUX. In the newspapers the battle is al ready joined on the currency bill. Even such staunch supporters of President Wilson as the New York World oppose control of -the whole banking system by a board of seven Presidential ap pointees, only one of whom is re quired to be a practical banker. Some newspapers suggest that National banks will surrender their charters and reincorporate under state law rather than Fubmit to the dictation of a political National board, especially as the law would require them to place a large proportion of their capital in the power of a regional reserve bank board, one-third of whose members are Federal appointees and another third removable toy the Government. The World urges Congress to find a middle ground between the Monetary Commission plan, which "made the Government merely a minority partner in the exercise of a sovereign func tion," and the new measure, which goes to the other extreme of practical ly excluding bankers. The provisions for strict Federal control are generally attributed to the influence of Secretary Bryan and his desire to curb the money power. Recalling that Secre tary McAdoo has berated the money barons, the Brooklyn Eagle says: "No where else in the world are there such money barons as will thus be called into being." It reminds us that, while the members of the Federal Reserve Board are to be paid $10,000 a year each, $50,000 is no unusual salary for a bank president. Level-headed business men not di rectly engaged in banking will proba bly agree that the currency bill goes too far in the direction of Government control. The power which it is pro posed to vest in the Federal Reserve Board is tremendous. Power to fix discount rates is really power to fix In terest rates throughout the country. Power to require one reserve bank to transfer funds to another places the banks' resources. at the disposal of the Government. Though the bill alms to discourage stock speculation. New York might be required to transfer funds to New Orleans for cotton spec ulation, or to Chicago for grain spec ulation. By issue or recall of Treas ury notes, this board could inflate or restrict the currency. This appears to be too great a power to vest in the hands of seven men, only one of whom is a practical banker. When it is proposed to hand over the daily management of each reserve bank to nine men, only three of whom are chosen by the men whose capital they handle, banks are asked to surrender the direotion of a large pro portion of their own business to out siders. A large measure of Federal control Is undoubtedly necessary in order to end and to prevent renewal of the evils attendant upon the concentration of financial power. But it may well be limited to the Federal Reserve Board and the majority of members of that board should be men of the best bank ing experience. Surely the reserve banks, which would directly handle the funds of stockholding banks, should have control of their own af fairs, subject to the general provisions of the law, and perhaps with one di rector named by the Government on each board. A committee of one rep resentative of each reserve bank might be trusted to fix the discount rate, sub ject to armrova.1 hv thA T.-rl ora 1 T? a serve Board, and to arrange transfer of funds from one reserve board to an other under the same restriction. It is to be hoped that the banks will not bv unreasoning onnnsHttnn iiiiri the back of Congress and provoke it to insist on features of the bill which, through friendly co-operation, might be eliminated. If they should, they would risk sacrifice of the many excel lent features which would prove bene ficial to them and might precipitate a situation parallel to that of tho rail roads, which is responsible for the present depreciation of railroad credit. The bill is far from perfect, but it is so infinitely superior to the present law that the banks should concede some points to those whom they have given only too good cause to distrust them, while the Democracy should recognize the banks' right to control of their own capital under proper safeguards. Secretary of Agriculture Houston has made a good beginning at putting life Into the pure-food law by apply ing it to meat, as was its obvious in tent. Now let him restore authority to the crippled bureau of chemistry and take It away from the solicitor of his department, who has usurped power to decide whether adulterators shall be prosecuted. Let him depose the illegal Remsen referee board and root out the experts who have nullified the law. He has had ample time to do all these things, but he has kept the department much' as Secretary Wilson left it. Assurance that the food we now consume Is pure Is as necessary as increased production of food. Mr. Houston has had nearly four months to do these things, but has done none of them. How far our laws fall to accomplish the ends of their snonsnm ami nom plish other ends which were never dreamed of is illustrated by the Su preme Court decision on the civil rights of negroes. The Federal civil rights law was designed to secure social equality to negroes under the Fourteenth Amendment, but the court has swept it away. That amendment, on the contrary, has been the refuge to .which corporations have flown from laws which they alleged to be confisca tory. It did not secure equality to the negro, but it gave corporations un designed protection. By manning our diplomatic service with writers, President Wilson may be sowing the seed for a new crop of novels with local coloring drawn from the world's capitals. Had Mr. Nichol son accepted the mission to Lisbon, we might have had a story of life un der the Portuguese republic with roy alist plotters flitting through its pages. The New York Evening Post demurs to the charge of the World that Colo nel Roosevelt is a boss. It calls him "the most perfectly functioning barom eter of public sentiment we have." That Is a beautiful title to add to the many the Colonel wears, but he did not function perfectly in 1912 or he would now be where Mr. Wilson is. Attorney-General Reynolds knows a ereat deal of law. Perhaps he has devoted himself so assiduously to that abstruse science that h time to spend upon the comparatively simple study Of 1ustic. .Tiietio lc D extremely simple that it often repels me oeepiy scientific legal intellect. An Oregon City laborer having un earthed a store of gold on property be longing to another, no doubt we soon shall be favored with that ancient con troversy as to who should get the Naval officers. after a. test, have had their gold braid restored uy secretary uanlels. It was as cruel to take that braid away as to deprive a. uauy oi Its milK. Another aviator is preparing for a flight across the Ocean Pratloolltt his only hope of survival lies in the cnance tnat he will change his mind about starting. An additional jvxemntlnn rr esnn tne income tax may be allowed for ccu cnna. un tnat status many of no tumu quote our income as a minus quantity. The Mavor nf VonoAm.. tt- having given free reign to .fireworks .u. uistracsers, it mignt be well for the hospitals to arrange a few extra cots. The proposed currency measure pro vides $10,000 horth. fnr. faithful, still. Our Will has a job, so mat ynaae ui it opes not interest us. The bottom has dropped out of the berry - market. We opine, however that the bottom of the berry box is still on the same high perch. The Democrats will put sewing w.ica-u o me iree list. Gracious! But won't that put an awful crimp in the high cost of living? Anyway the weather gives us a chance to save up a few more dollars for vacation time. While the hot wmva I oiaimnn. i Are da throughout the East with lt3 fiery mo.si, wooiens are still comfortable in favored Portland. President Huerta has announced an extra session of Congress. As though poor old Mexico . hadn't suffered enough. The President's eldest daughter trims her own hats. Probably got tired of being trimmed on her hats. . Seventeen nations having adopted the Bryan, peace plan, war may be ex pected at any hour. Now we know why the sun has been neglecting us. It's fully occupied In the East. Excitin&r davs &rn nhnml -n - lona. They have Introduced A m .,-i,n baseball. The "spues." of course, win u. their vacation on a walking trip. No doubt the ReaDer Is whptMno- his scythe for the Fourth. Huerta appears to be annrn.v,u the overthrow stage. The Mikado i3 now about. And v had eight doctors! Had a regular picnic! Scraps and Jingles By Leose Caaa Baer. It has been scientifically proved that Father Noah was. among other things, an electrician. He made the arc light on Mount Ararat, it seems. e The money borrower who says ha will be everlastingly Indebted for the loan usually keeps his word. Many a man who boasts that his aim Is always to be honest is a notoriously bad marksman. see Anna Belle writes to ask if it la proper to refer to one' gentl'man fran" as a certain party. I do not think so. Anna Belle. None of them are certain - not even when they're tagged.) see "I couldn't live without you," , Th8 Marquis cried In tears. "Why not?" the maid retorted. "You've lived that way for yeara." Yes. but rich one," pleaded he. The words came thick and last, "The higher cost of living Has nabbed me fast at last.1 Man advertised for his missing wife, describing among other things her large Roman nose. Bet a bean he doesn't find her. A nose of that sort never turns up. e e "Happiness," warbles IJlbertus Hub bardus. "lies In the pursuit and not the catching of It." Bet Elbertus never ran for the last car. e My Idea of an economical wife is one who saves her wedding dress for a possible second wedding. ' There once was a person With purpose most kind Who called round at Sing Sing Some converts to find. A bold counterfeiter at lonelv and sad And the person spoke thusly To make his soul glad: "Is It thoughts of the past That your soul sadly frets?" "Naw. It's what didn't pass That my sad soul regrets." Hospital case of the woman "Injured by reckless driving" turns out to be nail not auto. I believe that the sole and only pur pose of a pitcher of water In front of an orator is to give him something to do when he can't think. "Don't stand beside the stove, Fred. I The weather Is not cold." "But I aln-t warmin" weather," Replied young Teddy bold. . Chortles, an enthusiast: "What glad thoughts surge through the mind in contemplating a large family gathered about the festive board." Just so. But the gladdest thought that surges Is that there isn't going to be enough or anything left over to supply hash and fricassee for the next ten days. A moving speech "Fire!" Woman lost her switch and, adver tising for it, had it returned. Only genuine hair restorer I ever heard of. Housewives Interested in the higher wage question shouldn' kick about the price of eggs. Remember, sistern, one egg is a whole day's work for one hen. m m m Statistics show that women talk less in February than In any other month. If women were bank directors we wouldn't hear of so many instances where banks go to smash and the di rectors "know nothing of what is go ing on." Will Henry Thompson's Famous Poem A cloud possessed the hollow field. The gathering battle's smokv shield. Athwart the gloom the lightning flashed. And through the cloud some horsemen dashed. And from the heights the thunder pealed. Then, at the brief command of Lee, Moved out that matchless infantry. With Pickett leading grandly down. To rush against the roaring crown Of those dread heights of destiny. Far heard above the angry guns A cry across the tumult runs. The voice that rang through Shlloh's woods And Chickamauga'8 solitudes. The fierce South cheering on her sons! Ah, how the withering tempest blew Against the front of Fettigrew! A Kunsin wind that scorched and singed Like that infernal flame that fringed The British squares at Waterloo! A thousand fell where Kemper led: A thousand died where Garnett bled; In blinding flame and strangling smoke The remnant through the batteries broke And crossed the works with Armistead. "Once more in Glory's van with me!" . Virginia cried to Tennessee: "We two together, come what may. Shall stand upon these works today!" (The reddest day in history.) Brave Tennessee! In reckless way Virginia heard her comrade say: "Close round this rent and riddled rag!" What time she set her battle-flag Amid the guns of Doubleday. But who shall break the guards that wait Before the awful face of Fate? The tattered standards of the South Were shriveled at the cannon's mouth And all her hopes were desolate. ' In vain the Tennesseean set His breast against the bayonet! In vain Virginia charged and raged. A tigress in her wrath uncaged. Till all the hill was red and wet! Above the bayonets, mixed and crossed. Men saw a gray, gigantic ghost Receding through the battle-cloud. And heard across the tempest loud The death-cry of a nation lost! The brave went down! Without dis grace They leaped to Ruin's red embrace. ' They only heard Fame's thunders wake. And saw the dazzling sunburst break In smiles on Glory's bloody face! They fell, who lifted up a hand And bade the sun in heaven to stand! They smote and fell, who set the bars Against the nro&rresa rf lh. staru And stayed the march of Motherland! They stood, who saw the future come On through the fight's delirium! ihey smote and stood, who held the hope Of nations on that slippery slope Amid the cheers of Christendom! God lives! He forged the iron will inat clutched and held that trembling hill. God lives and refsrns! He built and lent The heights for Freedom's battlement wnere floats her flag In triumph still! Fold up the banners! Smelt the Buna! Love rules. Her gentler purpose runs. A mighty mother turns in tears The pages of her battle years Lamenting all her fallen sons!